Erste Philosophic and in Krisis. And even when he was constrained to mention the philosophical contribution of Hegel, there was never any full discussion of dialectical logic. For a philosopher with such a deep concern for logic and the transcendental foundations of logic, this refusal to engage Hegel is puzzling, but certain. As my own early teachers of Husserl correctly insisted: If there is ever any doubt as to Husserl's logical position on any disputed question, one will never go wrong in interpreting him in an anti-Hegelian sense. In the very few places where he forced himself to say something positive about Hegel, the best he could come up with was that Hegel's thought provides us more with a Weltanschauung than with a strict philosophy.1" /> The hidden dialectic in Edmund Husserl's phenomenology - Edie James M | sdvig press

The hidden dialectic in Edmund Husserl's phenomenology

James M. Edie

pp. 75-84


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